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Micro-Irrigation in Rainfed Pigeonpea - Upscaling Productivity under Eastern Gangetic Plains with Suitable Land Configuration, Population Management and Supplementary Fertigation at Critical Stages


Affiliations
1 ICAR-Indian Institute of Pulses Research, Kanpur 208 024, India
 

Water - a critical input for sustained crop production - is becoming limiting both under rainfed and irrigated condition. It calls for an effective on-farm management of water in field crops through microirrigation (drip-fertigation) that could take care of both drainage during rainy months and supplementary life saving irrigation thereafter. Therefore, the present field study involving three planting configurations and five drip-fertigation schedules were taken up in pigeonpea (long duration) during 2010-12 under Eastern Indo-Gangetic Plains at Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India. Significant grain yield advantage (19.6%) was with single drip-fertigation with half of N + K fertilizer at branching over farmers' practice (rainfed pigeonpea, 2858 kg/ha). Drip-fertigation at both branch and pod development also out-yielded (3468 kg/ha) over improved practice (furrow irrigation, 3262 kg/ha). These yield levels realized were close to potential yield (2.5-3.0 t/ha). Twice drip-fertigated plots also had higher yield attributes (pods/plant, 100 seed weight and harvest index), lower water use, greater soil profile water content and water use efficiency (65.1 kg/ha cm), higher plant nutrient (N, P and K) uptake with improved soil nutrient availability and greater net return (INR 9650/ha) over farmers' practice. A case study on a micro-scale was also given which could explore the possibility of out-scaling the technology.

Keywords

Critical Stages, Indo-Gangetic Plains, Microirrigation, Pigeonpea, Planting Configurations, Rainfed Pigeonpea, Supplementary Fertigation.
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  • Micro-Irrigation in Rainfed Pigeonpea - Upscaling Productivity under Eastern Gangetic Plains with Suitable Land Configuration, Population Management and Supplementary Fertigation at Critical Stages

Abstract Views: 262  |  PDF Views: 118

Authors

C. S. Praharaj
ICAR-Indian Institute of Pulses Research, Kanpur 208 024, India
Ummed Singh
ICAR-Indian Institute of Pulses Research, Kanpur 208 024, India
S. S. Singh
ICAR-Indian Institute of Pulses Research, Kanpur 208 024, India
N. Kumar
ICAR-Indian Institute of Pulses Research, Kanpur 208 024, India

Abstract


Water - a critical input for sustained crop production - is becoming limiting both under rainfed and irrigated condition. It calls for an effective on-farm management of water in field crops through microirrigation (drip-fertigation) that could take care of both drainage during rainy months and supplementary life saving irrigation thereafter. Therefore, the present field study involving three planting configurations and five drip-fertigation schedules were taken up in pigeonpea (long duration) during 2010-12 under Eastern Indo-Gangetic Plains at Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India. Significant grain yield advantage (19.6%) was with single drip-fertigation with half of N + K fertilizer at branching over farmers' practice (rainfed pigeonpea, 2858 kg/ha). Drip-fertigation at both branch and pod development also out-yielded (3468 kg/ha) over improved practice (furrow irrigation, 3262 kg/ha). These yield levels realized were close to potential yield (2.5-3.0 t/ha). Twice drip-fertigated plots also had higher yield attributes (pods/plant, 100 seed weight and harvest index), lower water use, greater soil profile water content and water use efficiency (65.1 kg/ha cm), higher plant nutrient (N, P and K) uptake with improved soil nutrient availability and greater net return (INR 9650/ha) over farmers' practice. A case study on a micro-scale was also given which could explore the possibility of out-scaling the technology.

Keywords


Critical Stages, Indo-Gangetic Plains, Microirrigation, Pigeonpea, Planting Configurations, Rainfed Pigeonpea, Supplementary Fertigation.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv112%2Fi01%2F95-107